Our first ever overnight in 'Bryony', our new Autosleepers Broadway EB, at the Dartmouth Camping and Caravan club site
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Our first outing in Bryony – Dartmouth Camping and Caravan club
We look at the ground ahead,
totally unconvinced. “You’ll be alright, there’s a gentle slope. Inertia and
gravity – you’ll roll out tomorrow”.
Not reassured at all, we fix
the site manager with our best ‘Paddington Bear’ hard stares, perfected over thirty-five
years of dealing with the nation’s children and teenagers.
“It looks pretty wet and
there is that dip – are you sure we’re going to roll out tomorrow – this is
3.5T”
“Seen it all before Sir.
You’ll have no problem rolling this gentle incline”.
And with that he wanders off
to welcome another Autosleeper onto the site. We draw cautiously onto the grass
from the safety of the gravel track. Time would tell which of us has made the
right assessment.
Our first night away in Bryony
and we are privileged to have stunning views across rolling South Hams
countryside and out over the gorgeous Start Bay. But stunning views are
tempered by that gnawing feeling of doubt. We remain unconvinced about that
slightly sloping grass pitch. So much rain in the week before, our wheels are going
to be spinning tomorrow, we are sure of it.
There is, of course, so much
to learn when you are new to motorhomes. In our enthusiasm, we forgot the first step –
levelling up on the Fiamma ramps. In a whirlwind of coordinated teamwork, we
had hooked up the electrics, turned on the gas and sorted the Thetford toilet
cassette and cistern. The harmony panel had lit up, we’d turned on internal gas
and water taps and one of us had done numerous trips to the local water point
with a 10 Lt jerry can to fill up the water tank. Of course, sensible people
would have called in at the motorhome service point first on their way into the
site. We all live and learn!
This is our snag finding trip
– a thorough inspection of Bryony and test of all her systems. Our
dealer has promised to pick anything up the following week and so we set about
things with gusto. All the draws and cupboards are opened, closed and checked. The
trim and veneers are inspected. We try all the plugs, lights and electrical
systems. One of us crawls under the van, down into the deepest recesses of the
driving cab and inspects roof seals and skylights as well.
As we spend the day and
evening inside Bryony things are moved about to get a better living and working
arrangement. Everything has its place. Items are grouped – a toolkit cupboard,
a safety cupboard, individual lockers for crockery, electronics and gadgets.
Slowly we work out the Feng Shui of efficient living in Bryony. Some things get
stored in the shower tray – the cycle panniers, the empty rucksacks. Everything
else just seems to disappear into a locker somewhere! We draw up a rough sketch
of what goes where. It will be analysed and pondered over during the non-touring
winter months and, will of course, change several more times as we do longer tours
next spring.
We learned the importance of
electric rear step management after one of us walks out the door and steps down
into nothingness, a near face plant on the grass narrowly avoided.
We agreed an etiquette to
guide our living in a restricted space and draw up a ‘negotiable’ list of his,
her and joint jobs – see our post on’ agreeing an etiquette to avoid divorce’
blog post!
The list of ‘snags’ at the
end of the night isn’t as bad as we initially thought:
·
Veneer coming away below
microwave and between bathroom door and main habitation area vanity mirror.
·
Bathroom window catch coming
away.
·
Parts of bathroom window
frame popping out.
·
A ‘dropped’ draw which just
keeps coming out when driving; ditto with the oven door.
·
The alarm activation/deactivation
fob on the spare key set not working at all.
·
The main set of keys not
doing proper central locking of all doors.
·
A tiny linear gap appearing
between bench toilet and interior wall – needing some re-caulking.
And that is it. Minor issues,
all easily resolved.
That night, our first error code appears on the Truma panel. E514H. Nothing in any of the handbooks, nothing on the Truma website help pages. The error code crops up three times more over the weekend. We manage to ‘fiddle’ with the symbols and buttons on the panel so that we get hot water but the heating is very hit and miss and finally doesn't come on at all.
Steep learning curve!
The following day we cycle down the hill into Dartmouth and sit in the late September sunshine on the waterfront reading the Sunday papers, admiring the boats (well one of us does the admiring) and drinking take-away lattes.
An amble along the main shopping
streets of this quaint old town on the banks of the river Dart with its
nautical history, Elizabethan houses, views across the river to Kingswear and the
steam railway station. Then the bike ride back up the three-mile-long hill,
with a quick detour to admire the castle at the entrance to the ria; hard work
but made easier with E Bikes.
Monday, we cycle the coastal
road to Torcross where we stop off for cake and coffee at the delightful ‘Billy
Can’. Here, you get smooth music, excellent service, fantastic homemade cakes
and a little gallery and traditional sweet shop attached to the cafe. Newly
opened, it is a delightful stop off and designed around the theme of the war
years, linked to the memorial in the neighbouring car park. You can read about
the ‘Exercise Tiger’ memorial here at www.exercisetigermemorial.co.uk .
Arriving back at the site
invigorated (it is up hill most of the way), we decide to try and move Bryony,
before the evening rain storms arrive. We want to drive her onto the gravel
track ahead, drive around the loop and then back onto the grass, directly up
onto the mud mats and ramps.
That’s the plan.
The reality? Those wheels spin and dig in deep.
Huge ruts, akin to tank tracks! Did we move? Nothing? Did we roll
under gravity? Of course not! Stuck and in deep. We break out the new Milenco Giant
Lattice Mud Tracks and wedge them under the front wheels. The wheels just spin
on their edges, gaining no traction whatsoever. After five minutes of wandering
around, head scratching and then trying second gear, we finally admit defeat.
We are stuck!
Rescue comes in the form of
the nice man opposite who owns a massive Nissan 4 x 4 ‘truck’. After assuring
us he can tow 4 tonnes, we scramble around trying to find the tow eye kit
(under the passenger seat, just in case you are interested). Someone gets very
excited breaking out the recently purchased AA towing strap. He feels its money
very well spent and he genuinely tries not to gloat when he receives a grudging
affirmation from the treasurer, that it is indeed a worthy investment.
Effortlessly, we are towed
onto the gravel track and our plan is resurrected. We circle Bryony back
around and the ramps and mats are lined up with the front wheels. Easing onto
the grass, she keeps moving up onto the mats and ramps. The boggy areas have
been avoided and ‘the plan’ successfully executed, with a little help. The next
morning, we should roll off the ramp onto the rear end of the mats and then
move forward across most of their length, thus giving us enough traction
movement to reach the track ahead.
Boy does it rain during the night
and we lie there listening to the fantastic orchestra of drumming rain and howling
wind and that happy, smug feeling that when dawn arrives, we should be able to
move off the pitch, slowly diminishes.
We of little faith! Cutting a
long story short, the plan works next day but the less said about the
battlefield quagmire left behind, the better! Suffice to say the ground team are
very understanding and good humoured about it.
So, what did we learn from
this first outing?
- Pick a correct pitch carefully and trust your gut instinct for a start. It isn’t a humiliation to ask for help!
- Develop routines...a routine for arriving at a site; a routine for leaving a site; a routine for day to day living in an enclosed space. (There are some excellent apps available to motorhomers. We list a few at the end of this post).
- Work out how to use the exterior universal silver screen on the windscreen BEFORE it gets dark, so that you don’t discover next morning it is upside down and inside out!
- Resolve the ‘how do you turn your driver seat to face backwards without having to release the handbrake first’ conundrum. (The answer is to move your seat forward before spinning it around).
- Breathing in sharply on narrow roads when lorries are coming towards you doesn’t physically decrease the width of your own vehicle, sadly!
- If you are of a certain height with short arms, you will have to dive head first into the door foot well to release the handbrake fully! That shrill bleeping alarm means the handbrake is still partially on! It is very difficult to execute a ‘smart’ hill start when your head is in the foot step well and you are trying to reach the handbrake!
- Read the information boards in car parks before you pay for your ticket – then you’ll discover that motorhomes are not allowed BEFORE you have paid for two spaces (Kingsbridge quayside car park)!
- Take your shoes off before getting into the driver’s seat OR come in via the back door and wipe your feet. In this way the driver’s cab area doesn’t take on the appearance of marshland after it’s been raining! Better still just convince the treasurer to allow you to buy some cheap car mats instead!
- Carry spare fuses, lots of them! Have a ground mat so you can crawl under the motorhome to switch on and off the gas tank beneath without having to take on the appearance of someone who has just completed a ‘Great Endurance Mud Run Challenge’!
- Bring plenty of tea towels and sponges to cram everywhere to stop all those incessant irritating rattles which drown out the radio when you are driving along B roads!
- Remember to make sure the drain taps are closed when you start filling the freshwater tank. Then you won’t be standing there for AGES, pondering about how amazingly big your freshwater tank seems to be!
The apps that we have already
started to use are:
1.
myLPG.eu and Autogas app –
both helped locate nearest petrol stations with LPG supplies (shell stations at
Trago Mills, Newton Abbot and also Saltash roundabout on A38; and Esso garage
on B3052 at turning to go down to Seaton).
2.
Park4night app – which gives
details of parking places where you can get motorhomes in.
3.
Searchforsites – shows
campsites for motorhomes in your immediate locality or region.
4.
For parking in the east Devon
region – car parking apps – RingGo, PayByPhone and Park-mobile.
We have had so much fun on this trip. We are smitten with Bryony and are loving the whole concept of motorhoming! Send us a postcard - a picture and caption of your motorhome for us to display on the blog.
In the meantime, take care
out there and have plenty of fun motorhoming.
Steve and Maggie
If you would like to find out more about us then visit these blog posts: https://wherenexthun.blogspot.com/2020/10/welcome-to-our-blog.html and https://wherenexthun.blogspot.com/2020/11/who-are-main-characters-in-our-blog.html
Information about Dartmouth:
The campsite we stayed on is https://www.campingandcaravanningclub.co.uk/campsites/uk/devon/dartmouth/dartmouth-camping-and-caravanning-club-site/
Tourist information about
Dartmouth and the South Hams can be found at https://www.visitsouthdevon.co.uk/places/south-hams and https://discoverdartmouth.com/
(everything from hiring sailing boats, to steam railway trips, boat
trips up river to Totnes and much more).














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Hi, we always look forward to hearing your comments, tips and thoughts. Drop us a line or two below. Take care now. Steve and Maggie